Bill Clinton Still Maintains He Tried Weed But Never ‘Inhaled It’

You might be a 90s kid if you remember Bill Clinton, once confronted by the fact that he touched wacky tobacky in his 20s, defending himself by saying he never ‘inhaled.’ In a recent interview, it’s a stretch he continued to stand by.

The return to the subject came from a new interview with Clinton in The New York Times in promotion of his and James Patterson’s new book The President Is Missing, a fictional thriller about, well, a missing president. When the conversation arrived at places like the Stoneman Douglas shooting and Hillary Clinton’s own failed bid for the White House, Times interviewer Josh Glancy decided to shift things to lighter matters.

“Given your political career is behind you now,” asks Glancy, “can you tell me, Mr. President, did you inhale?” Clinton tells Glancy that he’s glad the matter came up so that he can readdress it decades later. “No!” responds the former president.

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The story originated during Clinton’s first successful campaign for the Oval Office. During a forum in March of 1992, Clinton was asked if he had always stayed on the straight and narrow, ever breaking any international laws. “I’ve never broken a state law,” said Clinton. “But when I was in England I experimented with marijuana a time or two, and I didn’t like it. I didn’t inhale it, and never tried it again.”

Still, to return to that strange assertion is much weirder in an era where marijuana use is undeniably less scrutinized. Barack Obama even mocked the moment in 2006 before he beat Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primaries, joking: “When I was a kid, I inhaled.”